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Timaeus and Critias

PlatoLee, Desmond(Introduction and notes by)Lee, Desmond(Translated by)
Part of the Classics S. series
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Taking the form of dialogues between Socrates, Timaeus, Critias and Hermocrates, these two works are among Plato's final writings.

In Timaeus, he gives a thorough account of the world in which we live, describing a cosmos composed of four elements earth, air, fire and water which combine to give existence to all things.

An exploration of the origins of the universe, life and humanity, which outlines not just physical laws but also metaphysical and religious principles, it remained a paradigm of science for two thousand years.

The mysterious preamble to Timaeus contains the first account in literature of Atlantis, while the fragmentary Critias, unfinished by its author, provides a spellbinding description of the lost continent's ideal society, which Critias asserts was created by the god-like children of Poseidon himself.

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Product Details
Penguin Classics
0140442618 / 9780140442618
Paperback
113
28/03/1974
United Kingdom
176 pages, illustrations, maps, bibliography
128 x 198 mm, 129 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More